What is TCS on foreign remittance (LRS)?

Short answerWhen you send money abroad under the Liberalised Remittance Scheme (LRS), the bank collects TCS (Tax Collected at Source) — broadly 20% on amounts above ₹10 lakh in a year, with lower or nil rates for education and medical. TCS is not a cost: you claim it back as a credit in your return.

When TCS applies

Under the RBI’s LRS, a resident can remit money abroad — for travel, investment, gifts and so on — and the bank collects TCS on it. The broad rule is 20% on the amount above a ₹10 lakh threshold in a financial year, with concessional treatment for some purposes. Thresholds and rates by purpose change — confirm the current LRS TCS rules.

Lower rates for education and medical

Education and medical remittances are treated more gently — lower or nil TCS, especially where funded by an education loan. Ordinary investments or overseas travel packages attract the higher rate. The point of TCS here is information-gathering, not extra tax.

You get it back — an example

Example: you remit ₹30 lakh abroad to invest. TCS of 20% applies on the ₹20 lakh above the threshold — ₹4 lakh — collected by the bank and deposited against your PAN. You then claim it as a credit in your return, getting it refunded if it exceeds your tax. So it is a cash-flow timing issue, not a permanent cost. Our team can ensure you reclaim it.

Talk to CA Vijay R Singh

Sending money abroad and worried about TCS? You can message him directly, or book a short call to talk through your situation.

This answer is general information for taxpayers, not tax advice. Tax rates, thresholds and forms change with each Finance Act — please confirm the current position for your own facts, or speak to us, before acting.

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